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May 2003 Newsletter

Friday, May 2, 2003 Issue 16   VOLUME 1 ISSUE 16  
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CONTENTS
Computer Security Tip of the Month – Be Cautious About Utilizing Pay-Per-Use Wireless Service in Public Places
Cebic Technologies Inc. Earns Top Computer Security Certification
Cebic’s Cyber Security Vulnerability Analysis
Cebic to Hold Free Briefing on the “Ins and Outs of Security” May 22 in Denver
10 Ways to Protect Your Company Against Cyber Attacks – Part 1
Training Budget Exhausted?
Cebic Becomes Member of the Information Systems Security Administration
Supreme Court Declines to Take Internet-Era Case
Cebic to Attend Cyber Security Super Bowl at the Denver Convention Center on May 6-7
Microsoft Releases Windows Security Guide
Microsoft Releases Windows Security Guide

Microsoft released on Friday a tutorial and templates to help system administrators lock down the security of computer running the company’s newest operating system, Windows Server 2003.

The tutorial consists of portable document files (PDFs) detailing the reasoning behind configuring the server software for various applications, from a Web server connected to the Internet to a domain controller on a company’s internal network. Also included are examples of Microsoft-recommended configurations for specific applications.

“There are a lot of different settings that a customer can set on something like a Web Server,” said Michael Stephenson, lead program manager for Windows Server 2003. “What the guide does is explain to customers why they would want to change a setting a certain way.”

The publication of the security how-to guide came a day after the launch of the next generation of Microsoft’s server OS. Among other things, the guide contains explanations, checklists, sample configurations and scripts for setting up eight different classes of servers using Windows Server 2003.

Along with the Windows Server 2003 guide, the software giant released another set of documents called “Threats and Countermeasures,” which describes the various security options that can be set in Windows 2003 and XP.

The guides are Microsoft’s latest tactic in the battle to help better secure customers who install its software, as part of the Trustworthy Computing Initiative, the giant’s s15-month-old strategy to increase customers’ faith in its products.

That’s why Microsoft had decided to make a large body of best-practice documents available for Windows users, Stephenson said.

“As part of Trustworthy Computing, we need to make it easier to be secure in a certain environment, and that’s not something that we want to charge for,” Stephenson said.

The software giant has occasionally released such tools to help administrators identify vulnerabilities and harden the company’s operating systems. The guides build on another set of similar documents released in mid-March for Windows 2000.

In February 2002, Microsoft released the Baseline Security Advisor, a free application designed to let system owners scan their computers for Microsoft applications that were missing patches.

In two weeks, the company plans to put the Windows Server 2003 guide’s lessons into a Web tutorial format, to make learning the document’s content easier. Microsoft also plans to release a new tool this summer to automate the configuration of Windows Server 2003 systems, Stephenson said.

“This plays well to what we are doing in the future . . . automating security and configurations,” Stephenson said.

Source: ZDNet.com


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